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| NetworkSolutions certificates. | Всего Сертификатов на 31 липня 2010р.: 5 | Цены указаны в * Грн. * Руб. Дол. Євро ( $1=8.6грн.) | |||||||||||||||
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Ensuring website security and protecting the privacy of E-commerce customers doing business with you online is essential to establishing customer confidence and trust. That confidence and trust is established through securing communication between your customer's Web browser and your site, generally by way of a digital SSL Certificate. You can install an SSL Certificate yourself or one can be provided to you by your Web hosting provider or a third-party transaction-processing company.
Upon seeking to establish secure communications with your Web-based business (for example, when a consumer initiates an online purchase) the consumer's browser seeks to validate your Web site's authenticity by requesting an SSL certificate that verifies the identity of the Web site owner. Once that SSL certificate is recognized, a Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) connection is established for website security, encrypting data transmitted between you and the consumer including such information as credit-card and bank-account numbers.
Types of SSL Certificates
Online businesses may currently ensure website security by choosing between three types of SSL Certificates: Organizationally Validated (OV) SSL Certificates, Domain Validated (DV) SSL Certificates, and a third type of SSL Certificate, called Extended Validation SSL Certificates, which was introduced in early 2007. All SSL Certificates include data encryption and trigger the browser to display a closed padlock and the "https" prefix in the browser address window. However, not all provide the same level of validation that the bearer of the SSL Certificate is truly a legitimate business with a secure website.
At present, all businesses should consider trying to upgrade to EV SSL Certificates, assuming that they meet the validation requirements, since the EV SSL Certificate offers the greatest level of website security on the SSL Certificate market today.
Introduced in early 2007, Extended Validation Certificates (EV Certificates) represent the first major update of the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Certificate validation process in a decade. EV Certificates require substantial changes to the methods by which the authenticity and identity of online businesses are confirmed, helping consumers determine which Web sites are legitimate businesses having verifiable credentials.
An SSL Certificate performs two Internet security tasks:
The Internet security certificates are issued and validated by third-party companies called SSL Certificate Authorities (CA). When a properly issued SSL Certificate is present on a Web site, the site visitor's Web browser indicates Internet security with a closed padlock and an "https" in front of the Web address.
Although many SSL Certificate Authorities already perform rigorous checks to validate the legitimacy of applicants' businesses, EV Certificates standardize the validation system used by all CAs. Today, different CAs currently employ different types or levels of authentication when using non EV certificates, creating Internet security vulnerabilities that have been exploited for identity theft, fraud, and other online crimes. By contrast, the validation procedure for EV Certificates calls for all CAs to require applicants to supply the same documentation and verify legitimacy using a prescribed set of sources and methods.
As their name indicates, EV Certificates demand that CAs perform a more extensive validation process. To obtain EV Certificates, applicants have to provide CAs with more information about their business and the CAs have to verify the accuracy of the data through additional sources, including in some cases on-site visits to the applying business.
In addition to resolving the variations in validation procedures, EV Certificates take advantage of the enhanced Internet security features of the next generation of browser software. Consumers who visit EV-protected Web sites using next-generation browsers such as Microsoft's® Internet Explorer 7™, for example, experience both higher levels of validation security and a new visual indicator that a site's identity has been validated and its Internet security assured: Namely, the browser address window turns green when a secure, officially validated connection has been established.
Like sites using a different type of SSL Certificate for Internet security, those with EV Certificates continue to display the locked padlock icon and an "https" prefix to signal a secure connection.
Based on an industry-wide standard, EV Certificates were developed by a group called the CA/Browser Forum, consisting of the leading providers of Internet browsers and SSL Certificates, such as Network Solutions®. Eligibility for EV Certificates requires that you are either a government entity, corporation, unincorporated association, general partnership or sole proprietor. EV Certificates are expected to become the "gold "standard for online authentication.
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